Travel News

Teenager detained at Florida airport and accused of ‘skiplagging’ travel hack

Teenager detained at Florida airport and accused of ‘skiplagging’ travel hack


Logan Parson’s first flight by himself ended with airport officials taking the teenager into custody and whisking him away into an interrogation room.

Logan was visiting Gainesville, Florida, with his father, and planned to fly back alone. On the return trip, his father booked him a flight that began in Gainesville, but ended in New York.

New York, however, was not Logan’s final destination.

Instead, he planned to exit the plane during its layover in Charlotte — his hometown — and simply forgo the final leg of his journey, employing a travel hack called “skiplagging,” or hidden-city ticketing.

Skiplagging exploits the airline companies’ pricing schemes to the benefit of the customer.

Typically direct flights to a destination are more expensive than a flight with a layover. Perhaps a direct flight to Denver costs $370, but a flight to San Diego — with a several-hour layover in Denver — only costs $200. For a traveler hoping to get to Denver, it makes more sense to purchase the San Diego ticket and simply exit the plane in Denver, rather than purchasing a direct ticket to the city.

That’s what Hunter Parsons, Logan’s father, thought when he booked his son a ticket to New York.

“We’ve used Skip Lagged almost exclusively for the last five to eight years,” Mr Parsons told Queen City News. “Booked a flight from Gainesville regional to JFK via Charlotte.”

Mr Parsons dropped Logan off at the airport in Florida, but a gate agent noted the teenager’s ID cards were issued in Gainsville — the same city where his flight was scheduled to stop for a layover. The agent became sceptical and reported him to airport officials, who detained and questioned the teen.

“Interrogated a little bit, ultimately taken to a security room,” Mr Parsons said. “They kind of got out of him that he was planning to disboard in Charlotte and not going to make the connecting flight.”

After American Airlines learned that the teen was planning to skiplag, officials reportedly called his parents and forced them to buy a new direct flight from Gainsville to Charlotte.

Skiplagging cuts into the airline industry’s profits, therefore the airline industry does not like skiplagging. United Airlines actually sued a website dedicated to helping travelers find better skiplagging deals, but ultimately lost. Lufthansa went so far as to sue a passenger…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at The Independent Travel…